BioCycle

BioCycle Magazine is a publication serving the interests of the sewage sludge industry. It has been published under various names since 1960 when it was published by the Rodale Press, part of the Rodale Institute. BioCycle promotes the production of food on farms and gardens treated with sewage sludge, which it euphemistically called biosolids. The magazine works closely with Water Environment Federation, Kellogg Garden Products, US Composting Council, Rodale Institute and other promoters of growing food in sewage sludge.

Nora Goldstein is the current editor of the magazine, begun by her father Jerome Goldstein. Nora Goldstein writes, "In January 1978, ownership of BioCycle shifted from Rodale Press to The JG Press, Inc., and the publication’s name was expanded to Compost Science/ Land Utilization (CSLU). In his January-February 1978 editorial, 'Turning The Corner With Compost Science,' Jerry notes that the magazine was not only in a transition of ownership, but in a transition of focus. '... now it’s time to be an action publication as well - one that makes a great impact upon waste management decisions throughout the nation and the world.' " Most of BioCycle’s content is available online for subscribers.

Sally Brown is a research associate professor at the University of Washington. Her column in the March 2011 issue attacks as "ecoterrorists" the Organic Consumers Association and others who led the successful movement that on March 4, 2010 stopped the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission from giving away sewage sludge as “organic biosolids compost” for home and school gardens. Sally Brown wrote: “Here, six ecoterrorists have the City of San Francisco quaking in its boots, leading officials to stop a compost giveaway program that was making hundreds happy." Climate Change Connections: "Compost Security." Brown, Sally, BioCycle Magazine, March 2011.

BioCycle's Gene Logsdon
Gene Logsdon is a long-time reporter for BioCycle, a small-scale farmer and author who advocates strongly for using sewage sludge as fertilizer. In 2010 Chelsea Green published his book Holy Shit!.

Logsdon's boosterism for growing food in sewage sludge is described on page 121 of is the book Toxic Sludge Is Good For You written by John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton in 1995. Stauber and Rampton write:  "As horror stories like these [about sludge poisonings of people and animals] have begun to leak out, advocates of sludge farming are responding.  'There is no doubt, among sludge scientists in general, that their long and arduous efforts to convince society of the safety of sludge have been set back a few years,' wrote Gene Logsdon in BioCycle magazine.  'One good effect ... is that it should become easier ... to get funds to mount education programs.'  Logsdon advocated 'funding a road show' starring scientist-advocates like Terry Logan 'and a star-studded supporting cast of waste-water treatment plant operators.  Put another way, this is a job for a creative advertising agency.  If the nuclear industry can convince the public that nuclear energy means clear air,  then improving the image of sludge would be, pardon the pun, a piece of cake.'

Promoting Sewage Sludge as "Organic Compost"
Sludge Compost Facilities is a 2010 report was created by BioCycle and the North East Biosolids & Residuals Association, NEBRA, to update the list of sewage sludge (aka biosolids) composting facilities around the United States. A total of 265 sludge compost facilities were found and are listed here.

No Such Thing As "Certified Organic"
In a March 2010 BioCycle article, managing editor Dan Sullivan defends the leaching of agricultural chemicals into so-called "organic compost." Based on the controversy over findings of the pesticide bifenthrin in wheatgrass grown in compost, the article details how maintaining the current "certified organic" standards in the soil and crop industry in California is "impossible."

The article features opinions by Chuck Benbrook of The Organic Center (TOC) and Rachel Oster of Recology--both interviewees explain that pesticides are an unavoidable risk in compost and that the USDA should take a "broader stance" on evaluating composts and soils.

Food Rights Network Fights Back Against 'Ecoterrorist' Smear
Leading organic gardening and food safety advocates who oppose growing food in sewage sludge are attending the national BioCycle magazine conference Tuesday, April 12, 2011 in San Diego to demand an apology and retraction from Sally Brown, a columnist and editorial board member of BioCycle magazine, and from Nora Goldstein, the executive editor, who are calling organic and safe food advocates "ecoterrorists."

Magazine Staff

 * Jerome Goldstein, Editor and Publisher Emeritus
 * Nora Goldstein, Editor
 * Rill Ann Goldstein, Publisher
 * Ina Pincus, Associate Publisher
 * Dan Sullivan, Managing Editor
 * Craig Coker, Rich Flammer, Diane Greer, Robert Spencer, Molly Farrell Tucker, Managing Editors

Editorial Board

 * Sally Brown, Ph.D., University of Washington
 * Carla Castagnero, AgRecycle Inc.
 * Luis F. Diaz, Ph.D., CalRecovery Inc.
 * Larry Krom, Focus On Energy
 * Fred Michel, Jr., Ph.D., The Ohio State University
 * Wilson Rickerson, Meister Consultants Group, Inc.
 * Carol Werner, Environment and Energy Study Institute

Related SourceWatch articles

 * biosolids
 * The EPA's plan to bypass opposition to sewage sludge disposal
 * Water Environment Federation
 * You say biosolids, I say sewage sludge
 * Scientific Studies of Sewage Sludge
 * Sludge contaminants
 * Sewage Sludge Primer

External articles

 * Marie Kulick, Smart Guide on Sludge Use and Food Production, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, 2008.
 * Targeted National Sewage Sludge Survey: EPA-822-R-08-016 and EPA-822-R-08-018, EPA, January 2009.
 * Environmental Working Group, Dumping Sewage Sludge On Organic Farms? Why USDA Should Just Say No, April, 1998.
 * Environmental Working Group, Routes of Exposure sewage sludge: EWG Research on Chemicals in sewage sludge, April 30, 1998.